Category Archives: parasites

¡Felicidades, Colombia! Colombia Eliminates Onchocerciasis

 

Credit: Flickr user Char R/ CC

Credit: Flickr user Char R/ CC

The Global Network for Neglected Tropical Diseases would like to congratulate Colombia on becoming the first country in the Americas to eliminate onchocerciasis. This Monday, July 29, Colombia received verification of the elimination of onchocerciasis from the World Health Organization (WHO). This is a great achievement in the field of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) and global health!

Onchocerciasis, also known as river blindness, is an NTD caused by a parasitic worm and is transmitted by the bite of Simulium black flies. This NTD causes disfiguring and painful skin infections and eye lesions, and is the second leading infectious cause of blindness globally. Control and elimination efforts began in the region of the Americas in the early 1990s, primarily with the formation of the Onchocerciasis Elimination Program for the Americas (OEPA). OEPA, which is sponsored by the Carter Center, was launched in 1993 in response to the Pan American Health Organization’s (PAHO) resolution CD35.R14, which calls for the elimination of onchocerciasis from the Americas. At the time of the resolution, 500,000 people were at risk for onchocerciasis in the region and the NTD was endemic in 13 foci found in 6 countries: Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico and Venezuela.

The recent success in Colombia is a result of close collaboration between Colombia’s Ministry of Health and Social Protection, Colombia’s National Institute of Health and its partners, which include The Carter Center and OEPA, PAHO, Merck and many others. In countries endemic for onchocerciasis, people were treated with ivermectin (Mectizan) through mass drug administration campaigns two to four times a year. The hard work and dedication demonstrated by the local health workers and community leaders in distributing the treatment and educational information was essential for achieving the goal to eliminate transmission of the disease. Ivermectin is donated by Merck & Co through the Mectizan Donation Program.

Ecuador may be the next country in the region to apply for verification of elimination, following the 3-year post-treatment surveillance phase established by the World Health Organization (WHO). Guatemala and Mexico will complete the 3-year post-treatment surveillance phase in 2014 and could then request verification from the WHO. The remaining two foci in the region are in southern Venezuela and northern Brazil, among the Yanomami indigenous community. A key to the elimination of onchocerciasis in the Yanomami area is an integration of activities to address other determinants of health and NTDs, such as strengthening primary care services, access to clean water and improved sanitation.

On the same day, energized by the announcement that Colombia received certification for the elimination of this NTD, the Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and Minister of Health and Social Protection Alejandro Gaviria demonstrated once more their government’s commitment to the people of Colombia by launching its 5-year integrated national plan of action to address trachoma and soil-transmitted helminthes.

Colombia’s experience can help guide the efforts of other Latin American and African countries working towards elimination of this and other NTDs. Thanks to these great achievements, we are closer to seeing the end of the seven most common NTDs by 2020!

Abby Emdin’s Inspiring Presentation on World Without Worms

In mid-February, Abby Emdin, gave an awe-inspring presentation to the Picton Rotary Club on neglected parasitic infections. Emdin’s informative presentation summarized the devastating effects of parasitic worm infections – that 600 million people worldwide are infected with worms, that 3.9 million children die annually from this cause, and that an alarming 40% of tropical disease burden is related to worms!

Emdin is the co-founder of World Without Worms (WWW), an initiative to raise money and awareness for school based deworming programs, the first such organization in Canada. Since Grade 9, Emdin has been involved in her school’s Social Justice Club and has hosted numerous fundraisers for neglected tropical disease and global child poverty. The funds raised are transferred to their partner organization, Deworm the World, which in turn are used to transport medication and provide education to at risk areas. To date, her work has raised over $14,000, which has allowed for the treatment of 30,000 children. All money raised by WWW in 2012 will be directed to school-based deworming projects in Bihar, India.

Learn more about Abby Emdin, and her organization, World Without Worms here.

Bugs, Animals and NTDs

By: Alanna Shaikh

Animals and insects play a huge role in the transmission of neglected tropical diseases. From the snails that carry schistosomiasis to the wild animals infected with African sleeping sickness, the NTDs rarely travel alone. That means any effort to control and eliminate NTDs must take into account their many vectors and reservoirs of disease.

The NTDs are not zoonoses. That is, they are not diseases that animals can directly infect humans with. It’s more complicated than that. For example, in the case of human African trypanosomiasis, infected animals are bitten by the tsetse fly, which then carries the parasite to human victims. As long as animals remain infected, there is a risk of human infection.

In the case of schistosomiasis, the parasite that causes the disease has to spend part of its life living in certain kinds of snail. In this case, eradicating the snail would probably eliminate the disease, but doing it isn’t essential. They’re not a reservoir for the parasite, just a stopping point at one time in its revolting little life.[1] The animals reservoirs of schistosomiasis are dogs, cats, rodents, pigs, horses and goats[2], who just get infected with the disease the same way people do.

Be they roundworm, hookworm, nematode, or whipworm, the NTDs have got you totally covered for wormy horror.  In possibly the most yucky arrangement of all, many NTDs are causes by actual visible to the eye worms that LIVE INSIDE YOU. I hope my use of all caps conveyed my sheer horror to you. If it didn’t, go take a look at , then come back here and try to pretend you aren’t horrified.

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Deworming as a public health intervention: can it have lasting effects?

On May 16, 2011, the Center for Global Development hosted an event for Michael Kremer and Sarah Baird to present data on their long-term follow-up research study called “Worms at Work: Long-run Impacts of Child Deworming in Kenya.” Other authors on the paper include Joan Hamory Hicks and Edward Miguel). This paper concludes that deworming in Kenyan schools can show significant, long-term gain in employment and earnings and among dewormed children. Continue reading